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The annual Harker Research Symposium showcases the discoveries of Harker's young scientists and alumni, honors the work of career scientists and entrepreneurs, and celebrates Silicon Valley's innovative spirit.

Research Symposium

2018's theme was"The Artificial Intelligence Revolution"

The research symposium, held each year in the spring on the upper school campus for the entire Harker community, includes displays of Harker students' often award-winning projects; talks by alumni involved in research; and corporate exhibitors.

Symposium Program Includes

Dozens of talks by Siemens, Synopsys and Regeneron participants

Talks by Harker alumni

More than 50 poster sessions by middle and upper school students

Workshops on technical writing, research internships and research competitions

Interactive displays by corporate exhibitors

How You Can Participate

The Harker Research Symposium is for the entire preschool through grade 12 Harker community, but we welcome outside organizations as exhibitors - come showcase your products!

Keynote Speakers

Sponsored by Harker's upper school science department and organized by Harker's WiSTEM Club (Women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics ), the event has drawn some of the top names in technology as keynote speakers, including Sun Microsystems co-founder Scott McNealy; Salman Khan of Khan Academy; Nobel Laureate Dr. David Baltimore; and Dr. Fei-Fei Li, chief scientist of AI/ML at Google Cloud. The 2018 keynote speakers were Jeff Dean, Google's senior fellow on the Google Brain Team, and Andrew Beck, co-founder and CEO of Path AI.

Student Abstracts

The research symposium celebrates the curiosity, scientific thinking and communications skills of Harker students in grades 8-12. Poster sessions and formal talks demonstrate high caliber student research and world-class science and academic programs at Harker.

About the Research Symposium

The annual Harker Research Symposium showcases the discoveries of Harker's young scientists and alumni, honors the work of career scientists and entrepreneurs, and celebrates Silicon Valley's innovative spirit.

Science department chair Anita Chetty, advisor for WiSTEM (Women in STEM), capitalizes on Harker's proximity to world class technology development to boost the symposium beyond a showcase for student projects into the realm of opening visitors' minds to new ideas as they emerge.

The Harker Research Symposium typically draws crowds of more than 700 people. "Every classroom is standing-room only," Chetty said. Watch this space for updates!